Rehydrating dry yeast: what to look for.

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ballantynedewolf

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I rehydrate my dry yeast in 30C mineral water before pitching. Sometimes the grains sink v slowly and there's great foaming, other times they sink fast and sit there seemingly dormant, as just happened with 2 packs of MJ French Saison. I'm suspicious this yeast is in poor condition. I got it from a shop I haven't been to before.
Ferm has started within 12 hrs as it always does.
Are there reliable signs in the rehydration jar that tell me if it's good yeast or not?
 
I have found that different yeast have different behaviour, some on the stir plate will start foaming others seem to do nothing. I don't rehydrate or aerate any more and everything still goes as normal. I have been sent some dry English ale yeast from China and it has the same instructions as Fermentis not to aerate. I don't think it makes any difference to rehydrate as long as the temperature of the wort is comparable to the temperature of the rehydrated yeast.
 
I have found that different yeast have different behaviour, some on the stir plate will start foaming others seem to do nothing. I don't rehydrate or aerate any more and everything still goes as normal. I have been sent some dry English ale yeast from China and it has the same instructions as Fermentis not to aerate. I don't think it makes any difference to rehydrate as long as the temperature of the wort is comparable to the temperature of the rehydrated yeast.
Like you, I make OK beer, and have done so without rehydrating. But if I knew the yeast was top shelf, then my beer would be maybe better, and certainly more predictable.
Everything I've read about rehydrating says it should foam up, so when it doesn't I'm concerned.
 
Like you, I make OK beer, and have done so without rehydrating. But if I knew the yeast was top shelf, then my beer would be maybe better, and certainly more predictable.
Everything I've read about rehydrating says it should foam up, so when it doesn't I'm concerned.
Don't bother with the rehydrating, I can't recall which yeast didn't foam up I do know that the Fermentis SO4 did and CML yeast did, could have been a pseudo lager yeast or US05 which didn't foam.
 
We're going to have to agree to disagree. There are excellent reasons to rehydrate and it's easy to do. But I totally respect your decision not to.
 
Yeah I don't rehydrate anymore either, no real need, if doing a big ABV beer (or have more volume than a typical batch) just use two packets..
 
Hey Weal and Schikitar,

Do you guys predominantly only use dried yeast when brewing?

If you don't then what do you do with liquid yeasts? I am only 4 FWK's in and so far every yeast has been dried which I have rehydrated. Curious as to what needs to happen when (and if) I use a liquid yeast for the first time.

Cheers
 
With the liquid yeasts I will make a starter and have it on the stir plate for an hour before pitching, the dried yeast is past the oxygen stage this is an excerpt from a reply from Fermentis on Pro Brewer forum.

We don’t recommend to aerate the wort in normal conditions. The dry yeast has been produced and dried with a specific know-how of the Lesaffre Group, in order to maximize the Ergosterols content of the cells. It allows the yeast to ferment well.
However, you could aerate the wort in particular cases, for example if you recycle the yeast, maybe the 02 will be limited after the 4th or 5th pitch.

So even repitching saved dried yeast it still does not need oxygen until after the 4th or 5th pitch.
 
Do you guys predominantly only use dried yeast when brewing?
If you don't then what do you do with liquid yeasts?

For me it really depends on the brew. If I'm doing a bigger ABV (+6%) brew then I like to build a liquid starter on my custom made stirplate OR it might be that I just want to try a particular strain rather than something more generic like with the dry yeasts. I build my starters 24-36 hours before pitching - if you step them up or simply build a big starter then you can split it at this point and save some for the next brew (this is good as you don't have to harvest from the fermenter with all the crud, not that that is a show stopper). If I'm just quickly throwing an impromptu brew together and it's no bigger than say 5.5% then I just grab a packet of dry (usually S04 or M36) and just sprinkle that straight in, in many ways this is much easier but I like to experiment with every brew, also building little mini beers (starters) is kinda fun. Even though I mention the ABV limitation that's just something I've been doing lately - a dry yeast, like M36 for example, will chew through a big beer just fine, you just have to up the amount you pitch (at which point the cost starts to equalise with liquid yeast which you can invest in once and split over many batches, economics)..
 
Thanks for the replies gents. One of the biggest time consumers for me when I am doing my FWK's is waiting for the temperature of the water I have boiled to come down to 30-35C before rehyrdating the yeast.

It would be a massive bonus not to have to do that if still able to yield the same results.
 
Give it a go next time, just sprinkle yeast in and see what happens, don't forget to report back with your findings! :)
Will do. One last one, is there a need to use double dried yeast if not rehydrating or does it make no odds (assuming not doing a high gravity beer)
 
One last one, is there a need to use double dried yeast if not rehydrating or does it make no odds (assuming not doing a high gravity beer)
As you are doing FW kits then one packet of well maintained dry yeast will be just fine! It may be a little slower to get going but it will go. If you overlap your brews then you could potentially pitch some slurry from one brew to the next, that should take off pretty quickly and you get even more bang for buck. Just be super good with sanitation and handling as any brewer should..
 
Thanks for the replies gents. One of the biggest time consumers for me when I am doing my FWK's is waiting for the temperature of the water I have boiled to come down to 30-35C before rehyrdating the yeast.

It would be a massive bonus not to have to do that if still able to yield the same results.

If you've got a vacuum sealer make up a small bag and add the water,seal and cool in the fridge.When cool enough,open and add the yeast,reseal and leave to rehydrate.You could also add some wort to the bag to make a starter.
 
Rehydration is semi-optional. In ale brewing, the pitching rate provided by the typical homebrew sachet is OK. But its definitely not when dealing with lager brewing. The low wort temperature definitely reduces the hydration of the yeast and ultimately, the start of and progression of fermentation.

I sometimes pitch dry yeast into my ales and they perform well. However, I found out the hard way when brewing a German Leichtbier (1.040 SG), that pitching dry yeast on a 10C wort does severely delay the start of fermentation. It took almost 3 days for my Tilt to report any gravity reduction. Fortunately, my brewing practices are apparently clean and the beer eventually fermented out and its clean. But I now strongly recommend that any lager brewers be sure to rehydrate your dry yeast in 30C water that has decent mineral content (using epsom salt in RO water is very good too).
 
I rehydrate my dry yeast, just did one MJ 15 x2 pkts in 1050 23 L wort

Don't want to start the for and against debate its just the way I roll

When I do it I use filtered tap water boiled for 15 mins then into a cool bath of water in the sink

Sprinkle the yeast when the water reaches 35c then stir into a cream

Pitch this into my R/O wort which has minerals added during the mash and boil

This one had some epsom salts in it being an English Bitter
 
Rehydration is semi-optional. In ale brewing, the pitching rate provided by the typical homebrew sachet is OK. But its definitely not when dealing with lager brewing. The low wort temperature definitely reduces the hydration of the yeast and ultimately, the start of and progression of fermentation.

I sometimes pitch dry yeast into my ales and they perform well. However, I found out the hard way when brewing a German Leichtbier (1.040 SG), that pitching dry yeast on a 10C wort does severely delay the start of fermentation. It took almost 3 days for my Tilt to report any gravity reduction. Fortunately, my brewing practices are apparently clean and the beer eventually fermented out and its clean. But I now strongly recommend that any lager brewers be sure to rehydrate your dry yeast in 30C water that has decent mineral content (using epsom salt in RO water is very good too).
Found the same thing with Crossmyloof Belgian yeast, I ignored the 'rehydrate' and got nothing, it just sank to the bottom, gave it a good stir and it started about 12 hours afterwards.
 
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